New Zealand PM Luxon Survives Vote of Confidence

WELLINGTON, April 21 (Reuters) – New Zealand ⁠Prime ⁠Minister Christopher Luxon ⁠said on Tuesday he had the ​support of his party’s lawmakers after he called ‌a vote of confidence ‌in his leadership amid a drop in ⁠approval ⁠ratings for him and his party.

“I moved a ​formal motion of confidence in my leadership and that motion was passed,” Luxon told reporters after a ​party room meeting.

“I have the support of my ⁠caucus ⁠as their leader. Caucus ⁠has ​answered clearly and decisively and has backed my leadership ​and that ⁠matter is now closed.”

Luxon, a former airline executive turned prime minister, has seen his popularity fall over the past year amid a ⁠weakening economy and rising unemployment ahead of a national election ⁠in November.

Several support polls have shown Luxon’s National Party is struggling to poll above 30%, with some polls indicating the ruling coalition might not have the numbers win the election.

Luxon’s popularity as prime minister has also dipped with a March RNZ-Reid Research ⁠poll showing 20.7% of people preferred opposition leader Chris Hipkins as prime minister, while just 17.3% preferred Luxon.

(Reporting by Lucy Craymer ​in Wellington and Renju Jose in Sydney; ​Editing by Christopher Cushing)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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